[0001] The present invention relates to a semiconductor device, particularly a transistor.
[0002] As transistors which permit high densities of integration on Si substrates, the bipolar
transistor and the MOS (Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor) type field effect transistor [MOSFET]
have hitherto been typical, in view of the operating principles. While the bipolar
transistor is defined as a vertical device which utilizes the physical phenomena of
the diffusion and drift of minority carriers, the field effect transistor is a lateral
device which utilizes the drive of majority carriers by an electric field.
[0003] In recent years, on account of the limitations of physical constants inherent in
Si, ultraspeed devices employing compound semiconductors, principally, gallium- arsenic
(GaAs) have been under development without altering the essential mechanisms of transistor
operations.
[0004] Among these, a hetero-bipolar transistor (in, for example, Japanese Laid-open Patent
Application No. 49-43583) and a selectively doped heterojunction type field effect
transistor (in, for example, Japanese Laid-open Patent Application 56-94779) have
been described as transistors which employ heterojunctions.
[0005] From the viewpoint of the operating principle, the latter transistor is almost the
same as the MOSFET. In such transistors employing compounds, the essential transistor
operations do not differ from those of the devices employing Si, so that disadvantages
innate in the bipolar transistor and the field effect transistor (hereinbelow, termed
"FET") respectively remain unsolved.
[0006] More specifically, in case of the hetero-bipolar transistor, there is the disadvantage
that the density of integration cannot be as high as in the FET because an isolation
region must be secured. In the case of the bipolar transistor, there is the lower
limit of the thickness of a base layer because of a restriction in the operation principle.
[0007] On the other hand, field effect transistors are well suited for high integration,
but a common disadvantage has been the problem that a large current cannot be taken
out.
[0008] An object of the present invention is to provide an ultraspeed transistor suited
for high integration.
[0009] The invention is based on a new principle of causing two-dimensional carriers to
flow in a direction perpendicular to a surface where the carriers exist. The invention
can provide an ultraspeed transistor which has a high drivability and which is well
suited for a high degree of packaging or integration.
[0010] Fig. 1 shows an energy band gap structure for explaining the operating principle
of a prior-art
FET of the selectively doped heterojunction type. Similarly, Fig. 2 shows the sectional
structure of this FET. Using the molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) process ordinarily,
a GaAs layer 11 which is approximately 1 µm thick and which is not intentionally doped
with any impurity (usually, when the MBE is applied, the layer becomes a weak p -type
having an impurity concentration of at most 10
15 cm
-3) is grown on a semi-insulating GaAs substrate 10. Subsequently, an Al
xGa
1-xAs (x~ 0.3) layer 12 which contains approximately 1 x 10
18 cm
-3 of Si is grown to a thickness of about 500 Å. Thereafter, source and drain electrodes
21,22 and a gate electrode 13 are formed.
[0011] Shown in Fig. 1 is the energy band diagram directly under the gate electrode of the
semiconductor device. Si atoms introduced by doping are designated at numeral 14,
and a depletion layer based on a Schottky contact is designated at numeral 16. Since
AlGaAs and GaAs have crystal lattices of the same kind and have very close lattice
constants, the number of interfacial levels at a heterojunction interface is thought
to be very small. GaAs is greater in the electron affinity than Al
xGa
1 As (x~0.3). Therefore, a potential barrier based on the difference of the electron
affinities appears at the heterojunction interface, and carriers in two dimensions
15 are formed.
[0012] The prior-art FET is characterized by causing the two-dimensional carriers to flow
along the heterojunction interface, and it has accordingly been impossible to derive
a great current therefrom.
[0013] The present invention overcomes the disadvantages of the prior-art FET of the selectively
doped heterojunction type and the hetero-bipolar transistor by introducing a new transistor
principle characterized in that the two-dimensional carriers 15 existing at the heterojunction
interface shown in Fig. 1 are taken out to the side of the GaAs layer 11, namely,
that they are taken out as current in a direction perpendicular to the heterojunction
interface, and that the creation and extinction of the two-dimensional carriers are
controlled by a gate voltage, whereby the magnitude of the current is modulated to
execute a transistor operation.
[0014] The fundamental construction of the present invention is summarized as follows.
[0015] A semiconductor device comprises,at least, first and second layers of different materials
which can form carriers at their junction interface, a control electrode which serves
to control the carriers, a first electrode which is electronically connected with
the carriers, and an electrode region which serves to take out the carriers in a direction
perpendicular to the plane of the junction interface.
[0016] In general, semiconductor materials which define a heterojunction are used as the
different materials of the first and second layers. In addition, the electron affinity
of the first semiconductor layer is selected to be smaller than that of the second
semiconductor layer. Accordingly, carriers are induced in the second semiconductor
layer at its interface with the first semiconductor layer. A forbidden band width
is selected to be greater in the first semiconductor layer than in the second semiconductor
layer. As a result, the sum between the electron affinity and band gap of the first
semiconductor layer is usually rendered greater than that of the second semiconductor
layer.
[0017] Regarding conductivity types, a typical construction is such that the first semiconductor
layer is a p-type layer or a non-doped layer which is not intentionally doped with
any impurity, that the second semiconductor layer is an n-type layer or a non-doped
layer which is not intentionally doped with any impurity, and that the third semiconductor
layer is a p-type layer.
[0018] As the third semiconductor layer, an impurity region may be formed within a semi-insulating
semiconductor substrate, or an impurity region may well be provided within a semiconductor
substrate identical in the conductivity type to the second semiconductor layer.
[0019] Of course, transistors of both the enhancement type and the depletion type can be
fabricated by applying the principle of the present invention. The types can be regulated
according to the distance between the gate electrode and the heterojunction interface
forming a channel, or the respective impurity concentrations and thicknesses of the
first, second and third semiconductor layers.
[0020] Embodiments of the invention are described below by way of example, with reference
to the drawings.
Fig. 1 and Fig. 2 are an energy band diagram and a sectional structural view of a
prior-art FET, respectively;
Fig. 3 and-Fig. 4 are a sectional view of a transistor according to the present invention
and an energy band diagram under a gate electrode thereof, respectively;
Figs. 5a - 5c and Fig. 6 are energy band diagrams at the times at which external potentials
are applied;
Figs. 7a - 7c are diagrams for explaining the symbols of transistors of the present
invention;
Fig. 8 is an energy band diagram concerning a transistor of the present invention
in the case of utilizing two-dimensional positive holes;
Figs. 9a - 9d, Fig. 10, Figs. lla - llb, Figs. 12a - 12b and Figs. 13a - 13c are sectional
views showing processes for fabricating transistors of the present invention in the
case of utilizing a two-dimensional electron gas; and
Figs. 14a - 14c are sectional views of a device in the case of utilizing two-dimensional
positive holes.
[0021] First, the operating principle of a new type transistor according to the present
invention will be explained with reference to a sectional view [Fig. 3] and an energy
band diagram [Fig. 4] of the element, concerning the transistor of the present invention
fabricated by employing a heterojunction defined between p-type GaAs and n-type Al
xGa
1-xAs. Thereafter, operating characteristics in the casesof applying external potentials
will be explained.
[0022] As shown in Fig. 3, a p-type GaAs layer 17 which is about 200 Å to 1000 Å thick and
an n-type Al
xGa
1- As (x ~ 0.3 or so) layer 12 which defines a heterojunction with the layer 17 and
which is about 300 A to 1000 A thick are formed on a predetermined semiconductor substrate
10. On account of the difference of electron affinities, free electrons in the Al
xGa
1-x As layer are accumulated on a heterojunction interface on the side of the p-type GaAs
layer 17, to form an electron gas layer 15 in two dimensions. Fig. 4 shows a band
structure diagram illustrative of this state. In Fig. 4, the same parts as in Fig.
3 are indicated by identical symbols.
[0023] Parts indicated by (I), (II) and (III) in Fig. 4 correspond to the layer 12, the
layer 17 and a layer 18, respectively.
[0024] The transistor of the present invention has a fundamental structure comprising a
source electrode 29 which lies in ohmic contact with the two-dimensional carriers
15, and a gate control electrode 30 which creates or extinguishes the carriers 15,
and further the third semiconductor region 18 which is located directly under the
control electrode 30 as well as the two-dimensional carriers 15 [in the present case,
an n GaAs layer having a thickness of about 5000 A], and a drain electrode 31 which
lies in ohmic contact therewith.
[0025] The essential feature of the transistor operation consists in that the two-dimensional
carriers 15 are taken out as current to the n
+ layer 18 located vertically below, and that the concentration of the two-dimensional
carriers is changed by applying an external potential to the gate electrode 30, whereby
the current in the vertical direction is controlled to execute the transistor operation.
[0026] Shown in Fig. 4 is the energy band diagram directly under the gate electrode in the
case of applying no external potential. Symbol E
F indicates the position of the Fermi energy, and symbol φ
Bn denotes the Schottky potential between the gate electrode metal 30 and the Al
xGa
1-xAs layer 12. Owing to a phenomenon called the pinning of the Fermi level, the value
of φ
Rn is considered to hardly change irrespective of the value of the gate voltage. Donor
ions in a depletion layer under the gate electrode are indicated by numeral 16.
[0027] Now, the transistor operations in the cases of applying external potentials will
be described more in detail with reference to energy band diagrams shown in Figs.
5a, 5b and 5c and Fig. 6. Shown in Fig. 5a is the energy band diagram at the time
at which the source electrode is grounded to equalize the potentials of a source and
a drain, whereupon a gate potential V
G positive with respect to the source electrode is applied. In Fig. 5a, the two-dimensional
carriers 15 at a concentration according to the value of the certain positive gate
voltage V
G are created. Since the source and the drain are at the same potential, no source-drain
current flows in this case. It is the same as in the conventional FET that a case
where the two-dimensional carriers are, in effect, existent at V
G = 0 is called the depletion type (D-type), while a case where the two-dimensional
carriers 15 are induced for the first time after applying a certain positive gate
potential is called the enhancement type (E-type). In addition, the threshold potentials
of the E-type and D-type are determined by the impurity concentrations and thicknesses
of the respective semiconductor layers (I), (II) and (III). Hereinafter, the layer
(II) shall be termed "passage layer".
[0028] Next, reference is had to the energy band diagrams in the cases where, besides the
state of Fig. 5a, a positive drain voltage V
D with respect to the source potential is applied [Fig. 5b] and a negative drain voltage
V is applied [Fig. 5c]. In the state of Fig. 5b, the two-dimensional carriers 15 and
free electron carriers the in the semiconductor (III) can be taken out as
/current between the source and the drain by the effects of diffusion, drift and tunneling.
Which of the above three effects predominates is principally determined by the acceptor
concentration and thickness of the semiconductor layer (II). In the state of Fig.
5c, the device is turned off.
[0029] Next, shown in Fig. 6 is the energy band diagram in the case where a negative gate
potential V
G is applied to extinguish the two-dimensional carriers. In this case, even when a
drain voltage V
D is applied, substantially no current flows (except for a breakdown current at the
application of a great voltage V
D).
[0030] The fact that the transistor can have a great current derived therefron, will be
outlined by comparing this transistor with the selectively-doped heterojunction type
FET. Letting L denote the gate length, and a denote the thickness of the two-dimensional
carriers, the current which is L
g/a times greater can be taken out. When a is estimated to be 100 A, the current is
about 100 times greater because L is 1 µm or so.
[0031] On the other hand, when compared with the bipolar transistor, the transistor of the
invention has the important merit that the transistor operation is executed if the
thickness of the p-type semiconductor layer 17 is greater than the thickness a of
the two-dimensional carriers. Thus, the restriction which is imposed on the thickness
of the base layer is greatly alleviated.
[0032] The symbols of this transistor are indicated in Fig. 7a. Numeral 30 denotes a gate
electrode terminal, numeral 29 a source electrode terminal, and numeral 31 a drain
electrode terminal. The transistor operations explained with reference to Figs. 5a
- 5c and Fig. 6 correspond to the case of a grounded source electrode in Fig. 7b.
A device can of course be fabricated by connecting a drain electrode as in Fig. 7c.
[0033] In the above description of the transistor operations of the present invention, the
two-dimensional carriers to be stored on the heterojunction interface have been electrons.
The transistor of the present invention can also be fabricated by utilizing positive
holes in two dimensions on the basis of the selection of materials for the heterojunction.
[0034] Fig. 8 shows an energy band diagram in the case of a three-layer structure which
consists of a p-type GaAs
1-xP
x layer 72, an n-type GaAs layer 77 and a p-type GaAs layer 78, a gate electrode 30
being arranged in Schottky contact with the GaAs P
x layer. Although there is the difference that source and drain electrodes from are
led out from the p-type semiconductors, not
/n-type semiconductors, the transistor of the present invention can be fabricated using
the two-dimensional holes.
[0035] In the above description, the Al
xGa
1-xAs/GaAs system has been referred to.
[0036] Needless to say, however, the present invention is effective with other heterojunctions
which meet the condition that the electron gas or positive hole gas in two dimensions
can be stored.
[0037] Such systems are, for example, InP-InGaAsP, al
yGa
1-yAs-Al
x Ga
-xAs, GaAs-AlGaAsP, InP-InGaAs, InAs-GaAsSb, Al
xGa
1-xAs -Ge, GaAs-Ge, CdTe-InSb, and GaSb-InAs.
[0038] The effects of the present invention can be summarized as follows:
(1) Two-dimensional carriers generated at a heterojunction interface are taken out
as current in a direction perpendicular to the interface. Therefore, when compared
with the prior-art selectively-doped heterojunction FET having substantially equal
dimensions, the device of the present invention makes it possible to derive current
which is about L /a times greater where a denotes the thickness of the two-dimensional
carriers and L the gate length. At Lg = 1 µm, current which was about 20 times greater could be obtained.
(2) A passage layer through which the two-dimensional carriers pass in the perpendicular
direction can be thinned, in principle, to the thickness of the two-dimensional carriers
or so. Therefore, when compared with the bipolar transistor of the same area, the
device of the present invention can afford a performance which is 4 - 100 times higher.
(3) The device of the present invention need not secure an isolation region unlike
the case of the bipolar transistor, and is therefore capable of high integration similar
to that of the selectively-doped heterojunction type FET.
(4) When a third semiconductor layer of the n-type or the p-type is selectively formed
in a third semiconductor substrate which is semi-insulating, the invention is effective
to mitigate the restriction in which a margin in the design of a transistor is determined
by the condition that depletion layers extending from both a source region and a drain
region do not overlap.
Example 1:
[0039] Figs. 9a - 9d show the principal steps of the manufacture of a semiconductor device
which utilizes a two-dimensional electron gas.
[0040] An SiO
2 film 40 having a thickness of 5000 A was evaporated on a semi-insulating GaAs substrate
10 by the use of the CVD process, and was subjected to selective chemical etching
in order to form a drain region. Using the SiO
2 film as a mask, an Si ion beam 45 was injected at a dose of 2 x 10
13 cm
-2 under an acceleration voltage of 100 kV, to form the impurity region 18. In this
regard, the ion implantation may be performed by selecting the acceleration voltage
from within a range of 20 kV to 150 kV and the dose from within a range of 0.5 x 10
13 cm
-2 to
5 x 10
13 cm
-2. An SiO
2 film was evaporated on the whole surface to a thickness of 5000 X by CVD, and, annealing
at 820 °C for 30 minutes was performed to activate the implanted Si atoms (Fig. 9a).
[0041] After the Si0
2 film was removed by chemical etching, a GaAs layer 17 was grown by 400 Å at a substrate
temperature of 680 °C in a vacuum of 10
-11 torr by the use of the molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) process. At that time, the layer
was doped with Zn atoms as acceptors to attain an acceptor concentration of 3
x 10 17 cm
-3.
[0042] Next, an Al
xGa
1-xAs (x ~ 0.3) layer 12 was grown by 500 Å. At this time, the layer was doped with Si
atoms as donors to attain a donor concentration of 1 x 10 cm
-3.
[0043] Subsequently, the selective etching of the Al
xGa
1-xAs layer 12 and the p-type GaAs layer 17 for disposing a drain electrode on the drain
region 18 was performed to expose a part of the layer of the drain region 18 (Fig.
9b).
[0044] Subsequently, Si0
2 33 being 3000 Å thick was evaporated by the CVD process and was selectively subjected
to chemical etching, thereby to be windowed for source and drain electrodes. Thereafter,
a source/drain metals [AuGe (1000 X) - Ni (200 Å) - Au (1100 Å)] were evaporated (Fig.
9c). Thereafter, alloying was carried out at 450 °C for 3 minutes. Numeral 29 indicates
the source electrode, and numeral 31 the drain electrode.
[0045] Here, it is important that the source electrode 29 and the drain region 13 are not
short-circuited by the diffusion of AuGe. In the current case, the closest distance
L
SD between the source region and the drain region as indicated in Fig. 9d was about
1 pm. Next, the part of the SiO
2 over the drain region 18 was removed, and Ti (1000 Å) - Pt (200 Å) - Au (1000 Å)
were evaporated to form a gate electrode 30. In the current case, a two-dimensional
electron gas existed at the heterojunction interface of the interspatial part 33 between
the source electrode 29 and the gate electrode 30, and this two-dimensional electron
gas and the source electrode 29 la
y in ohmic contact.
[0046] In case of the present enbodiment, owing to the use of the semi-insulating GaAs substrate,
a restriction on the source-drain distance L
SD is mitigated, and the p-type region 17 has its concentration lowered down to the
order of 10
15 cm
-3.
[0047] Since, in the present embodiment, the p-type region 17 was as thin as 400 A, an operating
speed which was about 4 times higher than that of a bipolar transistor having a base
layer 1000 A thick and substantially equal dimensions was attained.
Example 2:
[0048] Shown in Fig. 10 is a case where the transistor of the present invention was performed
on a p-type
[0049] GaAs substrate containing Zn at a concentration of 5 x 10
17 cm
-3, instead of the semi-insulating GaAs substrate.
[0050] In order to form an n -type region 18 in the semiconductor substrate 50, the ion
implantation process may be employed as in Example 1. However, the thermal diffusion
of Si atoms may well be employed for the purpose of improving the crystallinity of
epitaxial growth on the drain region 18.
[0051] The major reason therefor is that, when the layer 18 is formed by the ion implantation
process, the crystallinity after the annealing worsens in some cases.
[0052] As p-type dopants, Be etc. are possible besides Zn.
[0053] Desirable as the n-type dopant of the buried layer 18 is an n-type dopant whose diffusion
coefficient is as small as possible. In case of using the substrate 50 of the p-type,
it is important for widening the margin of the transistor operation that depletion
layers stretching from a source region and the drain region 18 are prevented from
overlapping.
[0054] Excepting the selection of the semiconductor substrate, the semiconductor device
was constructed likewise to
Example 1.
Example 3:
[0055] Shown in Figs. 11a and llb are examples of principal steps in the case where an E-type
transistor and a D-type transistor are properly fabricated on an identical substrate.
Drain regions 18, 13', a p-type GaAs layer 17 and an n-type Al
xGa
1-xAs layer 12 were formed at thicknesses and impurity concentrations similar to those
in Example 1 in advance. Photoresist 49 being about 2 µm thick was windowed selectively
in a part to dispose the gate electrode of the E-type transistor, and Be ions 46 were
implanted (at 50) under the conditions of an acceleration voltage of 30 kV and a dose
of 1 x 10
12 cm (Fig. 11a). After removing the photoresist, an SiO
2 film 3000 Å thick was evaporated by the plasma CVD process, and annealing at 800
°C for 30 minutes was performed to activate the Be atoms. Thereafter, drain electrodes
31, 31', a source electrode 29 and gate electrodes 30, 30' were formed via steps as
in Example 1 (Fig. 11b). The E-type transistor is a portion having the gate electrode
30', and the D-type transistor is a portion having the gate electrode 30. Owing to
the implantation (50) of the Be ions, the extent of the induction of two-dimensional
carriers in this region is adjusted. Threshold potentials can also be adjusted by
adjusting the impurity concentrations of the drain regions 18, 18'. That is, in the
example of the ion implantation, the threshold value is also changed by changing the
implantation energy and the dose.
Example 4:
[0056] Figs. 12a and 12b show an embodiment in the case where an E-type transistor and a
D-type transistor are properly fabricated on an identical substrate.
[0057] Likewise to Example 1, drain regions 18, 18' were formed on a semi-insulating GaAs
substrate 10. Subsequently, a GaAs layer 17' which contained Ge at an acceptor concentration
of
5 x 10
17 cm
-3 and which was 500 A thick was formed by the MBE process. Next, an Al
xGa
1-xAs (x ~ 0.3) layer
12' containing
Si at a concentration of
7 x 10
17 cm
-3 was grown by 400 Å, and a GaAs layer 34 containing Si at 10
18 cm was grown by
200 A (Fig. 12a).
[0058] Next, using a mixture gas consisting of CCl
2F
2 and He, the part of the GaAs layer 34 corresponding to the gate electrode of the
E-type transistor was selectively removed by etching, whereupon gate electrodes 30,
30' were formed. The steps of forming a source electrode 29 and drain electrodes 31,
31' were the same as in
Example 1 (Fig. 12b).
[0059] Numeral 33 designates an insulator layer. Since the distances between the gate electrodes
30, 30' and a channel (namely, the thicknesses of the layers) have a difference, the
concentrations of carriers to be induced in the channel become unequal, and the E-type
and D-type transistors can be realized.
Example 5:
[0060] Figs. 13a to 13c show examples of steps for fabricating an embodiment of the present
invention being of the self-alignment type in such a manner that the E-type and the
D-type are formed on an identical substrate.
[0061] Likewise to Example 1, n
+-type semiconductor layers 18, 18' were formed in a semi-insulating GaAs substrate
10 by the use of the ion implantation of Si. After annealing, a p-type GaAs layer
17" containing Zn at an acceptor impurity concentration of 5 x 10
16 cm was grown by 1000 Å by the use of the organic metal vapor evaporation process
[OM-VPE process]. More specifically, the V/III ratio between (CH
3)
3Ga and AsH
3 was set at 15, and crystal growth was conducted at a substrate temperature of 700
°C. Dimethyl zinc (CH
3)
2Zn was used as a p-type dopant.
[0062] Subsequently, an Al
xGa
1-xAs (x ~ 0.3) layer 12" doped with Si at 5 x 10
17 cm-3 was crystal-grown to a thickness of 600 X by the OM-VPE process employing AsH3,
(
CH3)
3Ga and (CH
3)
3Al. In order to dope the layer with the donors Si, SiH
4 gas was used. Next, in order to fabricate the D-type transistor, photoresist 49 being
about 1.5 µm thick was deposited and was selectively windowed.
[0063] In the illustration, the-photoresist is windowed in a part to form the gate electrode
of the D-type. Using the resultant photoresist as a mask, Si ions 47' were implanted.
Conditions for the implantation were an acceleration voltage of 30 kV and a dose of
1 x 10
12 cm
-2 (Fig. 13a).
[0064] Te, Se etc. heavier than Si are sometimes used as ion species.
[0065] A CVD SiO
2 film was deposited by 3000 Å, and was annealed at 750 °C for 20 minutes. Thereafter,
in order to form drain electrodes, the n-type Al
xGa
1-xAs layer 12" and the p-type GaAs layer 17" were selectively removed by chemical etching
(Fig. 13b). Subsequently, W silicide was deposited on the whole surface by 3000 A
by the use of a vacuum evaporator at 10
-6 torr, and gate regions 30, 30' were formed in accordance with conventional processing
methods. Next, using the gate electrodes as a mask, Si ions 47 were implanted.
[0066] Conditions for the implantation were an acceleration voltage of 50 kV and a dose
of 1
x I0
13 cm
-2.
[0067] Subsequently, SiO
2 3000 Å thick was deposited on the whole surface by the CVD process, and it was annealed
at 800 °C for 30 minutes. Subsequently, it was etched so as to leave an SiO
2 layer 33 for the isolation of electrodes, and a source electrode 29 and the drain
electrodes 31, 31' were formed by the use of AuGe (1200 - Ni (150 Å) - Au (1500 Å)
(Fig. 13c).
[0068] In the current case, the transistor having the gate electrode 30 is of the E-type,
and the transistor having the gate electrode 30' is of the D-type.
[0069] The present embodiment is characterized in that the D-type transistor is fabricated
by the ion implantation process.
[0070] The reason why the ion implantation was conducted using the gate electrodes as a
mask in order to form the source electrode as illustrated in Fig. 13b, is to establish
ohmic contact with a two-dimensional electron gas layer at a heterojunction interface
under the gate electrodes 30, 30'.
[0071] In the case of the present embodiment where the E-type transistor is previously formed,
the n-type Al
xGa
1-xAs layer 12" may well be replaced with a weak n-type Al
xGa
1-xAs layer which is not intentionally doped with any impurity.
Example 6:
[0072] An embodiment in the case of employing two-dimensional positive holes as carriers
is shown in Figs. 14a to 14c. SiO
Z 40 of 4000 A for forming a drain region 78 was deposited on a semi-insulating GaAs
substrate 10 and was selectively windowed, whereupon the drain region 78 was formed
using the thermal diffusion of Zn. For the thermal diffusion of Zn, diffusion sources
As and Zn were placed in an ampoule, and the ampoule was vacuum- sealed. The degree
of vacuum was 1 x 10
-6 Torr. Thereafter, the diffusion was carried out under the conditions of a diffusion
temperature of 650 °C and a diffusion time of 30 minutes. Then, the wafer was taken
out of the ampoule and was washed. Subsequently, a GaAs layer 77 containing Si at
a concentration of 5
x 10
17 cm
-3 was crystal-grown by 800 Å by the use of the MBE process. Next, a GaP
xAs
1-x layer 72 containing Zn at 1 x 10
18 cm
-3 was crystal-grown by 600 Å by the use of the MBE process. Next, chemical etching
for connecting a drain metal to the p-type GaAs layer 78 was performed (Fig. 14b).
Subsequently, Au - Zn (99:1) were deposited by 1500 Å as the source/drain metal and
were alloyed at 500 °C for 10 minutes, to form a source electrode 89 and a drain electrode
91., Next, a gate electrode 30 was formed by the use of Mo (1000 A) - Al (2000 Å)
.
[0073] Si0
2 33 forms spacer layers for isolating the electrodes. For a heterojunction which forms
two-dimensional positive holes 75 to appear at the interface thereof, Ge may well
be used in lieu of GaP
xAs
1-x. More specifically, it is the important point of the present invention that the two-dimensional
holes can be accumulated at the heterojunction interface. Even with a heterojunction
other than that of the GaP
xAs
1-x/GaAs or Ge/GaAs system, the transistor of the present invention can be constructed
as long as the two-dimensional holes can be stored.
[0074] In Examples 1 - 6 described above, the isolation between the elements was performed
by mesa etching. The depth of the etching was approximately 1500 X - 2000 A, and caused
no hindrance to planar structures. Of course, the isolation between elements can also
be executed by the use of the ion implantation of oxygen atoms etc.
[0075] In all the above examples, the second and third semiconductor layers defined a homogenous
junction. However, this is not always necessary, but a heterojunction may be used
in some cases. For example, although Example 1 used GaAs as the third semiconductor,
a semiconductor greater in the electron affinity than GaAs may well be used. In this
case, even when a semiconductor smaller in the electron affinity than GaAs is used,
the transistor of the present invention can be performed.
[0076] The important feature of the present invention consists in that two-dimensional electrons
or holes stored on a heterojunction interface are caused to flow in a direction perpendicular
to the heterojunction interface, thereby to provide a transistor from which a great
current can be derived.